Sant'Angelo in Vado is a comune (municipality) in the province of Pesaro and Urbino, in the Italian region of Marche.

Sant'Angelo in Vado
Comune di Sant'Angelo in Vado
View of Sant'Angelo in Vado and Metauro river
View of Sant'Angelo in Vado and Metauro river
Sant'Angelo within the Province of Pesaro e Urbino
Sant'Angelo within the Province of Pesaro e Urbino
Location of Sant'Angelo in Vado
Map
Sant'Angelo in Vado is located in Italy
Sant'Angelo in Vado
Sant'Angelo in Vado
Location of Sant'Angelo in Vado in Italy
Sant'Angelo in Vado is located in Marche
Sant'Angelo in Vado
Sant'Angelo in Vado
Sant'Angelo in Vado (Marche)
Coordinates: 43°39′51″N 12°24′41″E / 43.66417°N 12.41139°E / 43.66417; 12.41139
CountryItaly
RegionMarche
ProvincePesaro e Urbino
Area
 • Total
67.34 km2 (26.00 sq mi)
Elevation
359 m (1,178 ft)
Population
 (December 2022)[2]
 • Total
3,892
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Websitewww.comune.santangeloinvado.pu.it

Geography

edit

The municipality is about 90 kilometres (56 mi) west of Ancona and about 50 kilometres (31 mi) southwest of Pesaro. The Metauro river flows through it. It borders Apecchio, Belforte all'Isauro, Carpegna, Mercatello sul Metauro, Peglio, Piandimeleto, Urbania and Urbino.

History

edit

Roman era

edit
 
Plan of villa

The ancient Roman city of Tifernum Mataurense which lies underneath Sant'Angelo in Vado became a municipium at the beginning of the 1st century BC. The city was built on a grid with the main cardo maximus running past the public baths and terminating at a forum which lies beneath the former convent of Saint Catherine. The city grew grew particularly in the 1st and 3rd centuries AD with imperial financial support for many monumental buildings. Many remains of these are visible in the town.

Domus del Mito

edit

The Domus del Mito excavated beginning in 2003 was a large noble house (domus) built towards the end of the 1st century AD. The Domus is one of the most important archaeological discoveries of the last 50 years.[3]

It has an area of approximately 1,000 m2 (11,000 sq ft) and 27 rooms.[4] It was embellished with a rich complex of monochrome and polychrome figurative mosaics of excellent quality and mostly splendidly preserved. They exhibit various subjects with many figures, mostly linked to classical mythology, which have given it the name "Domus del Mito" (house of myths). The mosaics indicate the inclusion of the city in the circuit of specialised mosaic workers, and of cultured and refined owners. Among the themes depicted are particularly: Neptune and Amphitrite on the triumphal chariot pulled by sea horses followed by Dionysus, god of wine and then arriving at the petrifying face of Medusa. Another spectacular room is the triclinium in which a hunting and fishing scene are depicted surrounded by a festive repertoire of black and white geometric motifs.[5]

Description
edit

The Domus is located in the "Campo della Pieve". The Roman street was to the West of the house along a N/S axis and the entrance (vestibulum) was in room 6 with the Triumph of Neptune mosaic. From there the visitor would pass over a sandstone threshold and along a corridor with a mosaic floor depicting four two-tone geometric squares except for a pink floral element (room 20). This leads to the atrium-peristyle and to rooms 19 and 16, probably the tablinum next to which was a bedroom (cubiculum) in which is a geometric mosaic whose design is off-centre and depicting the face of Bacchus.[6]

From the corridor of the atrium, with a geometric mosaic with hexagons alternating with rhombuses, the dining room (triclinium) was reached from two other rooms, arranged symmetrically to the north and south, also used during banquets or meetings. In the triclinium is a hunting scene with fishing scene in the centre surrounded by many zoomorphic and mythological figures and a festive repertoire of black and white geometric motifs.

In the adjacent room to the south is a mosaic with the face of Medusa inside a hexagon while in the north room a mosaic in the form of a carpet to the west of which is a rectangle with pairs of animals. Rooms 23 and 24 are baths and a changing room area and perhaps room 21 (monochrome geometric mosaic) was used for the relaxation of guests. The rooms without flooring along the southern side are for domestic activities and in which loom weights and needles were recovered. Room 7 in the N/W corner along the road seems to have been used as a kitchen and subsequently for artisanal production of ceramics.


Post-Roman era

edit

There were two periods when there was a Roman Catholic Diocese of Sant'Angelo in Vado, although the Diocese has been suppressed since 1986.

Notable people

edit

Sports

edit

The town is represented by Vadese Calcio [it], an amateur football (soccer) club founded in 1952, mainly competing in Eccellenza, Promozione and Serie D. Its colors are yellow and red.[7]

Twinning

edit

Sant'Angelo in Vado has been twinned with Mar del Plata, Argentina, since 1998.[8]

References

edit
  1. ^ "Superficie di Comuni Province e Regioni italiane al 9 ottobre 2011". Italian National Institute of Statistics. Retrieved 16 March 2019.
  2. ^ Bilancio demografico mensile, Anno 2022, Istat (in Italian).
  3. ^ Emanuela Stortoni, Tifernum Mataurense: antico municipio romano. Museo e Parco archeologico: un progetto di tutela e valorizzazione dell’area archeologica di Sant’Angelo in Vado (PU), in Amore per l’antico dal Tirreno all’ Adriatico, dalla Preistoria al Medioevo ed oltre., su Gabriele Baldelli, Fulvia Lo Schiavo (a cura di), academia.edu, Roma, Scienze e Lettere, 2014, pp. 865-880., ISBN 978-88-6687-076-0
  4. ^ La Domus del Mito (in Italian)
  5. ^ Domus Del Mito - Sant'Angelo In Vado (Marche), Romano Impero (in Italian).
  6. ^ Filippo Venturini, La domus del mito a tifernum mataurense (S. Angelo in Vado, PU): struttura e mosaici, una rilettura critica. Munera Amicitiae. Miscellanea di studi archeologici per Enzo Catani https://www.academia.edu/100809199/La_domus_del_mito_a_tifernum_mataurense_S_Angelo_in_Vado_PU_struttura_e_mosaici_una_rilettura_critica
  7. ^ Vadese Calcio official website (in Italian).
  8. ^ Aldo Mecozzi, "Il Sindaco di Sant'Angelo in Vado a Mar del Plata", Noi e l'Argentina, retrieved 15 November 2023 (in Italian).
edit